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Endothelial Prohibitin Mediates Bi-directional Long Chain Fatty Acid Transport in White and Brown Adipose Tissues

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posted on 2022-05-02, 14:36 authored by Zhanguo Gao, Alexes C. Daquinag, Yongmei Yu, Mikhail G. Kolonin

The function of Prohibitin-1 (PHB1) in adipocyte mitochondrial respiration, adaptive thermogenesis, and long chain fatty acid (LCFA) metabolism has been reported. While intracellular PHB1 expression is ubiquitous, cell surface PHB1 localization is selective for adipocytes and endothelial cells of adipose tissue. The importance of PHB1 in adipose endothelium has not been investigated and its vascular cell surface function has remained unclear. Here, we generated and analyzed mice with PHB1 knock-out specifically in endothelial cells (PHB1 EC-KO). Despite the lack of endothelial PHB1, mice developed normally and had normal vascularizatoin in both white adipose tissue (WAT) and brown adipose tissue (BAT). Tumor and ex vivo explant angiogenesis assays also have not detected a functional defect in PHB1 KO endothelium. No metabolic phenotype was observed in PHB1 EC-KO mice raised on regular diet. We show that both male and female PHB1 EC-KO mice have normal body composition and adaptive thermogenesis. However, PHB1 EC-KO mice displayed higher insulin sensitivity and increased glucose clearance when fed high fat diet. We demonstrate that the efficacy of long chain fatty acid (LCFA) deposition by adipocytes is decreased by PHB1 EC KO, in particular in brown adipose tissue (BAT). Consistent with that, EC-KO mice have a defect in clearing triglycerides from systemic circulation. Free fatty acid release upon lipolysis induction was also found to be reduced in PHB1 EC-KO mice. Our results demonstrate that PHB1 in endothelial cells regulates bi-directional LCFA transport and thereby suppresses glucose utilization.

Funding

This work was supported by NIH grant 2R01DK088131 to MGK, the Bovay Foundation, and the Levy-Longenbaugh Fund.

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